It’s no surprise, then, that Westbrook was front and center when the Thunder participated in their annual Holiday Assist event on Monday, partnering with Sunbeam Family Services’ Grandparents Raising Grandchildren program to take local children on a Target shopping spree. OK, well: it was kind of a surprise to a little girl named Heaven, who didn’t know she was scheduled to be Russ’ shopping partner for the evening until he ran up to her.

Russell Westbrook was the first to scamper through the curtains to find his assigned kids James and Heaven and their cart, and he took them around the store with the exuberance of a rookie. While he was picking out dolls on one aisle, fellow veteran Nick Collison was making laps, scoping out the clothes aisles with his kid, who was getting all of their Christmas list and more fulfilled.

Paul George was busy in the electronics aisle, and showed off his skills with a Bop It to 9-year old Makhila and 8-year old Lebron, whose grandmothers Pauline and Terese were shopping with Thunder Girl Anna. Their living room television recently went out, so all four of them had been piling up in the bed to watch television together in the evening.

On Monday, not only did Makhila and Lebron get to pick out everything on their wish list, but so did their grandmothers. When Anna brought them to the register, Pauline started breaking down in tears of gratitude.

“The kids are just ecstatic because they weren’t really looking for much,” Pauline said. “They’re just precious.”

Reserve point guard Raymond Felton got into the act, too, taking care of both the children with whom he was paired up with and their grandmother:

Santa Felton is particularly upset that the kids he’s with haven’t seen Spider-Man, so he’s getting them the DVD pic.twitter.com/oKyIKCdtoc

Players got a designated amount to spend on Christmas gifts for kids they were shopping with. Ray Felton decided that didn’t matter. Ended up getting the kids everything they wanted and more (it was A LOT) and paid for them himself.